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Soul Asylum - Made to Be Broken (Deluxe Edition) (1986/2020)

Soul Asylum - Made to Be Broken (Deluxe Edition) (1986/2020)

BAND/ARTIST: Soul Asylum

  • Title: Made to Be Broken (Deluxe Edition)
  • Year Of Release: 1986/2020
  • Label: Warner Music Group - X5 Music Group
  • Genre: Alternative Rock, Grunge
  • Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:04:16
  • Total Size: 149 mb | 430 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Tied to the Tracks
02. Ship of Fools
03. Can't Go Back
04. Another World, Another Day
05. Made to Be Broken
06. Never Really Been
07. Whoa!
08. New Feelings
09. Growing Pain
10. Lone Rider
11. Ain't That Tough
12. Don't It (Make Your Troubles Seem Small)
13. Long Way Home
14. Another World Another Day (Alternate Version)
15. Fearless
16. Freeway
17. The Snake
18. Hey Bird
19. Friends
20. Can't Go Back (Alternate Version)
21. Swingin'
22. Lost In Your Face
23. Catch Me If You Can
24. Song of the Terrorist
25. To Go There
26. Twenty Year Itch
27. Ramblin' Rose

Eighteen months made a world of difference for Soul Asylum. Their debut EP, Say What You Will...Everything Can Happen, arrived in mid-1984 and sounded clunky and unfocused, as if the bandmembers were still deciding what they wanted to do. Made to Be Broken followed in January 1986, and it was a major leap forward in every respect. If their debut documented Soul Asylum as they were looking for a way out of their hardcore roots, Made to Be Broken was an inspired collision of punk attitude, hard rock muscle, pop melodies, and lyrics that combined passion and introspection. Dave Pirner and Dan Murphy's guitars may have sounded good on the first record, but they were great here, crunching but tuneful, and their vocal harmonies brought a lift to the performances that flattered the melodies and boosted the energy. New drummer Grant Young was a massive improvement over original timekeeper Pat Morley, and he helped Soul Asylum tighten up their attack, as they cracked the code of their trademark sound. And while they were still tearing through screamers like "Whoa!" and "New Feelings," "Tied to the Tracks" and "Can't Go Back" found them taking their songwriting to a new level, merging sweaty firepower with a passion and emotional openness they couldn't summon in their semi-hardcore era. While the production still suggested the band wasn't working on an especially large budget, this time out producer Bob Mould and engineer Steve Fjelstad were much more successful in capturing Soul Asylum's spark on tape. Say What You Will... was the work of a band whose ideas outstripped its ability to execute them, but Made to Be Broken was the evidence that the group had learned plenty since then and put the knowledge to good use.


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  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 23:51
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Many thanks for lossless.
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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 14:03
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Many Thanks